How are the charities selected?
By a competitive process—this year we received 550
applications for about 90 places—54 new listings and
36 Progress Reports; usually the applicant/selection
ratio is 3-4:1. Costs limit the size and number of
copies, and thus of charity descriptions. A wide readership
(120,000 copies), and our desire to interest as
many readers as possible, commend the widest variety
of organization types and fields of activity with three
related but distinct charities on each 2-page spread.
Since our purpose is donor education and our subject
is philanthropy, we look for donor-educational value,
and philanthropic “excellence.” We always have more
excellent charities applying than can be accepted, so
we favor new listings, and encourage applicants to
re-apply until they are selected.
What do you mean by “excellence”?
We have found, reviewing thousands of applicants
over 11 years, that to “excel”—to “stand out”
from the rest—is clear but not reducible to a list of
attributes mechanically applied, as on a check-list.
They include cost-effectiveness; outstanding idea
or approach to a problem; success and accomplishments;
and recognition by others, e.g., awards and
influence. Urgency of need helps but is not necessary.
Reviewers report that identifying excellence is not
difficult—the best ones “shine.” Thus “incandescence”
is an important criterion. We select a team
of reviewers (this year 25) from diverse constituencies
of philanthropy, known to be knowledgeable,
experienced, and sound in judgement, and we trust
them to recognize excellence when they see it.
Why is the Catalogue such a “high-end,” elegant,
publication? Wouldn’t that money be better spent in
philanthropy by simply giving it to the poor?
No, because the Catalogue is a multiplier—it attracts
far more money for the poor (and everyone else) than
it costs. We originally designed it as a “high-end”
publication because everyone we interviewed in
focus groups said their first response to receiving it
would be to wonder if it was “legitimate.” Distrust
and disrespect for philanthropy inhibits charitable
giving, so we made the Catalogue so elegant, welldesigned,
high-minded, well-written, packed with
useful information, and showcasing such excellent
organizations, that legitimacy would be obvious.
Also, we wanted it to be so beautiful, interesting,
and of enduring value, that readers would not easily
throw it away. Our goals are: first, to attract people
to open it, then to scan through it, then to save it for
later, then to review it deliberately, with interest in
images, then text, then to use it in charitable giving,
and finally to save it for future reference, display on
a coffee table, or as a conversation piece. This has
succeeded; charities want to be in it, donors and
foundations keep it and use it.
Why did I receive the Catalogue? How are the
recipients chosen?
The most cost-effective way to distribute this many
Catalogues is to buy a list each year from a respected
list-house, of people with estimated incomes above
$200,000, and/or net worth above $10 million. The
IRS says there are 121,000 Massachusetts taxpayers at
that level; our list-house estimates there are 120,000
such—close enough. Marketing research firms and
list houses compile and distribute such data, continually
refined; our list is said to be 94% accurate—tops
in the industry. However all lists are imperfect, and
we regret all errors in ours, as unavoidable.
How do you evaluate the Catalogue’s results? How
much money do you raise?
Our main purpose has been “donor education, to
increase and improve charitable giving.” Secondary
purposes are to attract new donors with major-gift
potential to our listed charities, whom we train to
help those donors learn more about philanthropy—
this is a collaborative donor-education program.
Success in education is not easily measured, though
one indication of our effectiveness is the respect
accorded the Catalogue by donors, charities, and
foundations. Another is that the Catalogue has
brought excellent people to our excellent charities,
resulting in great stories of empowerment and
benefits for everyone. When excellent charities are
presented in an excellent way to excellent people,
there will be excellent results.
The most common result, reported by almost every
charity, is that being listed in the Catalogue
improved their overall fundraising effectiveness,
by increasing their respectability with donors and
grantmakers—but this, too, is difficult to measure
as traceable to the Catalogue. First-year results are
important, but often donors begin a new relationship
with a charity with a relatively small gift, to test the
waters; if they are well treated, and encouraged to
become more interested and involved, their gifts increase
quite substantially (because these donors have
major gift potential)—which is difficult for small
charities to track and report over a period of years.
Dollars are evidence of successful donor-education
communications, but tracking the totals of donors
and dollars has been challenging and we don’t have
exact numbers. Since year two (1998), we have
encouraged donors to deal directly with the charities,
because they prefer to do that, but this forfeits our
control of the data. We ask the charities to report to
us all Catalogue-generated donations, but adequacy
of reporting varies widely—these are small charities,
relying on volunteers at crucial points, and data collection
and reporting are not their highest priorities.
Here’s what we do know: Our largest single gift is
a $10 million pledge to a capital campaign. Another
charity received over $1 million from a single donor,
over several years. Two family foundations took an
interest in one Catalogue charity and between them
donated $340,000. One charity received a grant of
$100,000 from a new family foundation; another
gained 50 new donors and $19,000 from their first
listing; another received $8,000 from Catalogue
readers, which was one-third of their total personal
donations that year. We have many anecdotes from
charities reporting four- and five-figure donations,
and thousands more of lesser amounts.
For donors who feel more comfortable working
through us, we provide a Giving Form in the
Catalogue, which we can track. Donors select specific
charities, or donate to a field of philanthropy, and
100% of their gift goes to the charities. Since 1998,
charities have received 4,142 of these donations for a
total of $1,847,719. Recently, donors have also been
able to give on our website via Network for Good;
since 2003, 720 of these have totalled $139,710.
The data we would most like to have, which we
have tried hard and creatively to get, is that of
donors giving directly to charities over a period of
years. Computerization and the Internet are steadily
improving our ability to get and manage this data, so
at least the outlook is bright.
What we do know is that, by their own testimony,
the Catalogue has strengthened the fundraising of almost
all our listed charities—though we have no way
of quantifying that result; we have directly raised for
them, at no cost to them, at least $15 million, and
this is 4-5 times our costs, which we have separately
raised, over and above what we have raised for them.
What else do you do, besides the printed Catalogue?
The print
Catalogue has always been part of a system
of mutually-reinforcing parts. Our website (www.cfp-ma.org) is a cumulative, universally accessible,
Catalogue, which we are dramatically enhancing this
year with the addition of an
Atlas of Philanthropy in
Massachusetts (see above, p.6 ). Our annual publication,
in various forms, of IRS data on income and
charitable giving has become the nation’s leading
stimulus for media discussions of giving in relation to
income; this year’ version is the
Opportunity Index
(pp. 68, above). We promote governor-declared
State Giving Days (see back cover) nationwide (11
in 2006) to reinforce charities’ annual appeals. In all
the above we have worked to develop a clearer, more
positive and useful vocabulary, conceptualization,
and rhetoric for philanthropy, which is summarized
in a short book,
Philanthropy Reconsidered (available
through our website).
These are all tools that can be used for philanthropy
anywhere—Massachusetts is our R&D laboratory,
as it were. We make them available to other markets
and institutions either free of charge, or by licensing.
Surrounding these efforts have been various informal
activities: helping other
Catalogues and similar
projects to get started nationwide—currently there
are two in the works, in Montana and southern
California; advising Massachusetts charities pro bono
on all kinds of questions they bring to us; and providing
philanthropic advisory services to individuals,
families and foundations, on the basis of our research
and unequalled data on Massachusetts charities.
How are you funded?
Private grants and donations from institutions and
individuals who believe philanthropy should be
promoted. We hope you will join us.